Archive for September, 2009
Remember Ponch?
Posted by Blanca in Everything else on September 14th, 2009
While I was driving home earlier today, I looked through the rear mirror and saw two policemen riding their motorcycles one next to each other. Right there, I had this flashback that transported me to the late 70s, a silly tune started to play in my head … ta-ta-ta-tata-taaaah-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-tatatatahhhh… and I could swear that I saw Poncherello smiling back at me with that perfect Colgate smirk.
But no, unfortunately it was not a CHiPs episode. The policemen rode away and I stayed there remembering the good’ol police and detective TV shows of yesteryear.
And I realized that there are so many of them and so hard to forget!
No, really. How can anybody ever forget Max from Hart to Hart? Or the way Bruce Willis looked with hair in Moonlighting? Or Tom Selleck’s moustache in Magnum PI?
And what about Farrah Fawcett’s larger-than-life smile on Charlie’s Angels … Columbo’s cigar …. Maxwell Smart’s goofiness … Kojak’s bald head … Hawaii 5-0 intro theme …. and Quincy’s …. ehem … well, who can possibly forget Quincy?! He is the forefather of CSI after all!
I love police shows. We’ve certainly been enjoying some good stuff also in the past couple of decades: from the X-Files to NYPD Blue, Law & Order, Dexter, Prison Break and 24, just to mention a few.
So this one is for all of you who still remember the oldies and liked them as much as I did: Officers Frank “Ponch” Poncherello and Jonathan “Jon” Baker in action. (and yes, please, feel free and get the tune stuck in your head for the rest of the week…)
Of roots and wings
Posted by Blanca in Everything else on September 13th, 2009
I am reading a book by Paulo Coelho, “The Winner Stands Alone” and I have to confess that I am not enjoying it much.
He seems to jump from one thought to the next, killing the flow of the story in the process. At first I had the feeling that it was probably a translation issue, but now that I am almost half-way through the book, it simply feels like if it was written by a first-time author.
But there is one part that -although it seems like a “patch” on the plot- I really liked. It’s actually two paragraphs that I read over and over again and decided that they have more meaning than the 150 pages of the book I’ve read so far. I liked them so much that I felt compelled to close the book and write this post straight away.
One of the main characters is an Arab, Hamid, who at a time of reflection about his past and future recalls the Arabic proverb “Blessed be that which gives your children wings and roots.”
And the next two paragraphs go like this:
He needed his roots. There is a place in the world where we are born, where we learn our mother tongue and discover how our ancestors overcame the problems they had to face. There always comes a point when we feel responsible for that place.
He needed his wings too. They reveal to us the endless horizons of the imagination, they carry us to our dreams and to distant places. It is our wings that allow us to know the roots of our fellow men and to learn from them.
And by reading this my muse finally decided to come back!
So, I guess I should thank Paulo Coelho for writing those two paragraphs. They are precious … even if the rest of his book is truly appalling.

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